WEB-EXCLUSIVE HOME TOUR

Tour the Ultimate Coastal Grandma Retreat in Maine

The home, which is perched right on the water, is also suffused with colorful Americana flare

“What’s really American about any design is the juxtaposition of multiple influences rather than just one,” McKenna says. Her patron saint for the project was the late design icon Sister Parish, whose efflorescent interiors of splashy chintz, casual wicker, and storied quilts epitomized American midcentury maximalism, a joyful foil to the more stern, Bauhaus-inspired minimalism influencing that same era.

Arguably, Americana’s enduring appeal is its sense of heritage. When it comes to the beach house’s freshly brushed feats of decorative painting, a sense of place is also present, most significantly in the dining room mural, inspired by legendary American folk muralist Rufus Porter. McKenna commissioned Connor Owens of Brooklyn’s JJ Snyder Studio for the work, which is painted on a 33-foot-long length of removable muslin (in preparation for the modern heirloom’s potential future relocation). Owens’s seascape of tall ships navigating a pastoral coast honors Porter’s style so beautifully that folk art enthusiasts have been falsely convinced of the mural’s 19th-century provenance, inquiring about its supposed restoration.

“The horizon in the mural is almost perfectly in line with the true horizon seen from the dining room windows,” says Owens of the unwittingly auspicious connection to a symbol of optimism so eternal, every generation that ever was has looked in its faraway direction in search of perspective.